Intel's Dual Core Farther on Roadmap

As Intel's new CEO Paul Otellini takes the reins of the world's largest
chipmaker, the company is moving forward with its "platformization" strategy
of building the next generation of embedded systems while updating customers
on product roadmaps.

This includes a longer timeframe before dual-core chips will make it
into Intel's product lines for business PCs, Intel said. Dual-core and
virtualization technologies, such as Intel's Vanderpool family of products,
are slated for release next year.

Paul OtelliniSource: Intel

For now, the focus is on how Intel can evolve its business client platform, tend its current generation of PC desktop processors, and move
to a platform approach that can meet the proliferation of different clients
in the computing ecosystem.

"Not just for components, but with an entire platform that adds new value
beyond gigahertz," he said.

By month's end, Intel will be rolling its new Professional Business
Platform made up of Intel's new 945G Express chipset,
Pro/1000 PM desktop adapter and Series 600 Pentium 4 processor with
hyper-threading technology.

Building on its success with embedded systems, Intel is also about to
roll its Active Management Technology, which is another name for embedded
agents that help system administrators monitor and fix PCs locally and
remotely.

In addition, Intel said its Stable Image Platform Program gives customers
a 12-month software map to help them
plan and manage their PC fleets. That's code for controlling total cost of
ownership costs: The Stable Image Platform Program typically ensures
customers that the software and system image they load on PCs won't be
broken or changed in the product lineup for 12 months.

"This is helping people minimize the number of configurations," Bryant
added. "It helps make transitions predictable, which helps lower costs."

This means no new surprises, such as dual-core processors or its
Vanderpool virtualization systems, until 2006 after the launch of the current
platform snapshot.

Just don't expect the company to spring any surprises on customers about
the product pipelines before they're ready to upgrade or test drive the
latest additions to Intel's 90-nm and future processor families.

Intel is clearly shifting to where the puck is going, which is in smaller, less
CPU-intensive clients, and building on its success with embedded systems, namely its Centrino family of wireless connectivity chipsets.

"Now it's going to extend that over time to wireless LANs
and WiMax ," Bryant said. "The more notebooks and handhelds
work like one device, the more they share connectivity and synchronize data
more seamlessly."

The trend helps explain Intel's investment in its Active
Management Technology offering, an embedded controller with diagnostic capabilities built into the silicon to ensure that the controller is talking over the network and
helping server-management personnel remotely manage the fleet of PCs and
computing devices.

Bryant said embedded systems won't solve all the problems of managing the
proliferation of different clients accessing networks, but hardware systems
can help ease some of the management headaches.

"We're looking at drivers,
trends, pain points that are key, such as security, and still-tight IT
budgets. At the same time, there's an explosion in the amount of data in the
enterprise."

The upgrade represents a major shift for Intel, as it faces the
possibility of investing in newer but lower-margin devices that are not as profitable
as its older lines, while working with partners in order to seed the
computing ecosystem with product support for the newer clients. To that end,
Intel has invested in systems for Flash, handhelds and notebooks, ranging from sub-notebooks to desktop replacements.

"It's a ton of work," Bryant said, and partners are grasping the
magnitude of the changes afoot.

Gordon Haff, senior analyst with tech research firm Illuminata, said
Intel's integrated platform is replicating the success Intel has enjoyed
with its Centrino chipset family. "Intel is big on replicating things that
work," he said.

Intel's bundling plans involve systems that work together, but also minimize power use. "Intel will certainly continue to sell their bread-and-butter desktop processors," Haff said. The proof in its shift to new embedded systems for smaller clients will come five years from now, Haff added, "when we'll be able to look at the PC and say 'rumors of its demise were greatly exaggerated.' But I still think, in general, if you look in the average home and where the computing power is, it is going to shift."

Is an xBox Intel-based? Are set-top boxes Intel-based? Tivo? More and more, new computers will be considered as those devices. The lower-power devices may have lower margins than the latest greatest PC, Haff added, but Intel is not out of the running in any of these emerging computing areas.